On Tue, 17 Mar 2020 at 11:31, Linus Walleij linus.walleij@linaro.org wrote:
It was brought to my attention that this bug from 2018 was still unresolved: 32 bit emulators like QEMU were given 64 bit hashes when running 32 bit emulation on 64 bit systems.
The personality(2) system call supports to let processes indicate that they are 32 bit Linux to the kernel. This was suggested by Teo in the original thread, so I just wired it up and it solves the problem.
Thanks for having a look at this. I'm not sure this is what QEMU needs, though. When QEMU runs, it is not a 32-bit process, it's a 64-bit process. Some of the syscalls it makes are on behalf of the guest and would need 32-bit semantics (including this one of wanting 32-bit hash sizes in directory reads). But some syscalls it makes for itself (either directly, or via libraries it's linked against including glibc and glib) -- those would still want the usual 64-bit semantics, I would have thought.
Programs that need the 32 bit hash only need to issue the personality(PER_LINUX32) call and things start working.
What in particular does this personality setting affect? My copy of the personality(2) manpage just says:
PER_LINUX32 (since Linux 2.2) [To be documented.]
which isn't very informative.
thanks -- PMM